Christ and the Multiverse: Following Jesus in Our Wild, Infinite Creation
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About this ebook
In the face of the dizzying possibility of alternate realities, this book lays out how this cosmology connects with the Gospel. Deeper still, it shows how the moral teachings of Jesus are even more critically relevant.
If you find the interplay between science and faith both hopeful and exciting, and are looking for the path to reality that manifests your best possible self, then this is the book for you!
David Williams
David Williams was a writer best known for his crime-novel series featuring the banker Mark Treasure and police inspector DI Parry. After serving as Naval Officer in the Second World War, Williams completed a History degree at St Johns College, Oxford before embarking on a career in advertising. He became a full-time fiction writer in 1978. Williams wrote twenty-three novels, seventeen of which were part of the Mark Treasure series of whodunnits which began with Unholy Writ (1976). His experience in both the Anglican Church and the advertising world informed and inspired his work throughout his career. Two of Williams' books were shortlisted for the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger Award, and in 1988 he was elected to the Detection Club.
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Christ and the Multiverse - David Williams
Christ and the Multiverse
Following Jesus in our Wild, Infinite Creation
David Williams
Apocryphile PressContents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Faith and Our Story of Creation
2. Science and Understanding Creation
3. The Multiverse of Multiverses
4. The Many Worlds and God
5. The Problem of Evil in a Multiverse Creation
6. Freedom, Determinism, and God in the Multiverse
7. Repentance, Transformation, and Jesus in the Many Worlds
8. Moral and Ethical Implications of a Multiverse Creation
9. The Probability of Grace
10. The Probability of Grace - Finding the Way to The Good
11. Other Faiths, Meaning, and Truth in a Multiverse Creation
Afterword
Conclusion One: The Absolutist
Conclusion Two: The Agnostic
Conclusion Three: The Skeptic
Conclusion Four: The Scientist
Conclusion Five: The Faithful One
Conclusion Six: The Spiritual But Not Religious
Conclusion Seven: The Christian
Notes
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Acknowledgments
Over the past few years, plenty of folks have helped out as I’ve wrestled with different versions of this book.
The guy I only knew as agnosticsRus on xanga years ago, who was stunned to find that his cosmology and mine were perilously close to one another. My frater Browning, always a vigorous sparring partner. Iron sharpens iron, as they say. Jonathan? Thanks for the support, my friend. One day, we will meet in person. Kevin and Kathleen? Thanks for nudging me to do more with this idea.
Thanks to Greg McFall and David Mosher for their corrections where I misinterpreted the physics. Any remaining oversights, omissions, or glaring errors are my own.
Thanks to John for his enthusiasm, and for giving this book a whirl. It’s a bit out there, but hey, every book has its place. Marla, thanks so much for that first edit. Janeen, your eye and inputs were appreciated.
Rache, thanks for reading and for your support.
There may be others. If I’ve forgotten you, be assured that in some other universe, I didn’t.
Introduction
The multiverse is everywhere.
The idea of the multiverse is both simple and wildly complex: there is not just one story, or a single narrative arc, or a single universe. Instead, characters in so many of the tales we tell ourselves inhabit just one of countless universes. In those universes, anything can happen. Their hold on the imagination of popular storytelling is nearly as complete as Disney's hold over all entertainment.
In the Marvel Character Universe that dominates film-making these days, it's how things work, as heroes and narratives weave not just one linear plotline, but as many as their screenwriters desire. Want to do something differently? Want Spiderman to be female, an anthropomorphic pig, or a noir detective? Boom. You got it. It's easy as pie in the multiverse.
It works, because everything works. Kill off a character? Three? All of them? Fans complain? Doesn't matter. Open a portal to a variant timeline where that didn't happen, and they're back again.
In the Star Trek universe, it's the same, and has been all the way back to those first few seasons on NBC back in the 1960s. Look, here's the universe where Spock is bearded! Oh, and here's another where Kirk is a subtle, thoughtful, understated captain who delegates well and is entirely comfortable with his expanding dad-bod.
Or if you need to reboot the franchise with a different Kirk and Spock? Just have that reboot happen in an alternate timeline, and you can keep the story going forever, reboots upon reboots upon reboots.
Multiversality is the core conceit of the peculiar, cynical cult cartoon hit Rick and Morty, where every universe they encounter gives us an opportunity to see how much worse it can get. It's the operating cosmology of more franchises than you can shake a stick at.
This use of alternate realities to frame our storytelling isn’t a recent phenomenon. Leaping among universes has been a fundamental conceit of sci-fi and fantasy writing since the dawn of the genres. C.S. Lewis mucked around with the idea in the Narnia books, after all. Narnia isn't just a different place in our universe...but a different space-time completely.
The question arises: why? Why is this peculiar slant on storytelling so common?
To a rather lesser degree than one might think, there's science. That theoretical physics now suggests that a multiverse may exist really doesn't drive our fantasy and science fiction storytelling. The complex quantum-splitting/inflationary understandings that arise from modern speculative physics really weren't a significant factor in the comic books I used to read as a kid.
Multiversality is without doubt a narrative convenience, one that allows storytellers to create endless, lucrative complexity within a single franchise. But there's something deeper at play.
In large part, the appeal of the multiverse may rise from the increasing blending of cultures and narratives in this strange new era of communication and human exchange. Where once there was just one understanding of the world, now human societies are having to come to terms with the presence of completely variant ways of understanding who we are and why we are here. This has always been necessary, as cultures have interacted and adapted to one another’s stories. But in the internet age, it's fiercely, relentlessly immediate.
Faced with the unfamiliar tales of those who are not us, you can, of course, reject them. This is the easier path. The only true story is our own, one can say. Every other cultural narrative is wrong. Or evil. You don't need to try to engage with them, or try to integrate them into your own self-understanding. You simply throw them aside as monstrous and flawed and delusional.
That way of dealing with the Other is powerfully seductive. We see it as we fall back into rigid ethnic and racial categories, or into the bright clean certainties of nationalism and fundamentalism. There is only one truth, and that's our truth. There's only one story, and that's our story. We reflexively resist, because we fear losing our understanding of ourselves in a wild chaos of competing truth claims. We prefer the simple, linear comforts of the story we know.
The alternative is unquestionably unsettling. Why is the story we have told ourselves for millennia about the way things came to be the One True Story? Because it is ours. Because it just is. It cements the hallowed place of our culture...or our race
...in the universe.
Yet do not reflexively and smugly sniff at this, O you liberal. Myth and mythopoetics are to cultures what memories and personal narratives are to individuals. They give us cohesion. They establish and reinforce a sense of self. Casting common story aside leaves us existentially fragmented, so disconnected from a sense of common social connection that our souls fall into anxious, gibbering chaos.
There are so many other stories rising from the humans who inhabit this small world. How to constructively process them?
It's possible that part of the appeal of multiversality as a cosmology is that it helps us constructively process difference. We come to see the variant possibilities inherent in the stories we ourselves tell. There are strange places where our heroes are villains, and our villains have become noble. If this is so—encountering another story, told from an unfamiliar perspective—poses no threat. We simply find resonances and harmonies with our own stories. Or we delight in the encounter with a new thing.
If we are already aware of the possibility of difference within our own stories, of subtle variances within the canon
of our telling, then perhaps that integration of difference prepares us for engaging with difference.
Which is fine if we're talking the Marvel Character Universe. But there are other, more defining stories, ones in which the fandom is rather more deeply committed.
How can this be true from the stance of religion? Surely faith traditions are more rigid and absolute in their narratives, unable to integrate difference into themselves. How can faith integrate into itself the idea that there are multiple and variant narratives of truth?
Faith, or so we tend to think, involves having one defining story, a singular mythos. There is a single acceptable set of truths, and anything outside of that truth set is either not of the faith or heretical.
We have, from the modern era's mechanistic assumptions about inerrant texts and the premodern era's assumptions about ecclesiastical inerrancy, assumed that authority is singular. So of course religion can only have one truth. Accepting variation would be a violation of canon.
And yet the Spirit can surprise you. As Christianity struggled with the wild opening-up of our collective story, there was a brief recent window where both evangelical and denominational Christianity opened themselves to a radical new possibility in the way we understand our faith.
Emergence, it was called, so named by the dear departed Phyllis Tickle in her remarkable work The Great Emergence. The idea behind emergence was that Christian faith would regularly make and remake itself, with major transitions coming roughly every five hundred years. With the rise of the internet, there was the prospect of just such a new era, one as fundamentally transformative as the Reformation. It was right there, a deep vibrant potentiality, one which Phyllis suggested would only be there for a moment. For denominational Christianity, that moment was particularly important. If we missed it, Phyllis suggested, the old fading Protestant denominations would fade into oblivion.
So, like, no pressure.
In the old mainline denominations, emergence tapped a yearning to move away from the stultifying institutional inertia that can make denominational ministry such an awkward, lumbering, graceless thing. Be open to the new! Don't crush everything under the weight of bureaucratic anxiety management processes and protocols!
For those who'd been brought up in the corporate dynamics of the megachurch world, emergence was a reaction to the synthetic falseness of business-model Christianity. Be flexible! Be organic! Be less like a JeezusMart, and more like a gathering of creative friends!
The spur to emergence in both of these milieus was the advent of new and dynamic media, which seemed to offer the promise of communities being dynamically amazing on the interwebs together. It had the potential to stir the old lines to new life, and bring authenticity to the rigid groupspeak of evangelicalese. From that foundation, newness and difference could be embraced, and the Jesus movement could keep on moving.
And it didn't work. Just didn't take. The reasons for the death of emergence were varied and complex.
In the evangelical megachurch world, the surface appearance of emergence was just folded into brand identity. Get the pastor to wear an ironic t-shirt, hipster glasses, four-hundred-dollar sneakers, and talk openly about sex with their wife, and you’re there. Look! We’re relevant!
In denominational Christianity, things went differently.
Denominational emergent folk weren't really... um ... how to put this... organizational
people. Efforts to fuse the ethos of disruptive, generative entropy with articles of incorporation and institutional schtuff proved untenable. I know. I was on that committee in my denomination.
That, and progressive emergents manifested the paradoxical tendency of anarchists to overorganize, creating such complex structures to ensure that every voice is heard that no